Wе agreed to answer the following questions certified by the United States District Court for the District of South Carolina:
I. Does State Farm’s South Carolina automobile policy obligate it to compensatе an insured making a comprehensive or collision claim for any diminution in market value where there is no dispute that the vehicle was adequately restored to its pre-accident level of performance, appearance, and function?
II. If the answer to the previous question is yes, is Plaintiff bound by the appraisal provision within the insurance policy?
FACTS
The facts are not disputed. Albеrt Schulmeyer (“Schulmeyer”) sustained damages to his automobile as the result of an accident. A State Farm Fire and Casualty Company (“State Farm”) adjustor estimated the loss at $3,268.02. State Farm paid the amоunt of the loss minus the deductible.
Schulmeyer admits his vehicle was fully and properly repaired. However, Schulmeyer asserts State Farm failed to compensate him for an additional $1,000 in “diminished value” to the vehicle, which occurred as a result of the accident.
I
Diminished Value
Schulmeyer asserts State Farm is obligated to pay for any diminishment in value of his vehicle beyond the cost of repairs. Schulmeyer relies on
Campbell v. Calvert Fire Ins. Co.,
In Campbell, plaintiff claimed and judgment was entered for the total loss of his vehicle. As there was no evidence to support the award, this court reversed the trial court and remanded the matter for further action. In the opinion this Court wrote:
*494 It follows from the foregoing that where there is a partial loss and the automobile can be repaired and restored to its former condition and value, the cost of repairs is the measure of liability, less any deductible sum specified in the policy. But if, despite such repairs, there yet remains a loss in actual value, estimated as of the collision dаte, the insured is entitled to compensation for such deficiency.
Id.
at 591,
Campbell is distinguishable from the present case. The State Farm insurance contract is more specific in its obligations than is the Campbell contract. The Campbell contract provided:
The limit of the сompany’s liability for loss shall not exceed either
(1) the actual cash value of the automobile, or if the loss is of a part thereof the actual cash value of such part, at time of lоss or
(2) what it would then cost to repair or replace the automobile or such part thereof with other of like kind and quality, with deduction for depreciation, or
(3) the applicable limit of liаbility stated in the declarations.
Campbell
The State Farm contract at issue provides:
The limit of our liability for loss to property or any part of it is the lower of:
1. the actual cash value; or
2. the cost of repair or replacement
Actual cash value is determined by the market value, age and condition at the time the loss оccurred. Any deductible amount that applies is then subtracted.
The State Farm policy defines the term “cost of repair or replacement” as:
1. the cost of repair or replacement agreed upon by you and us;
2. a competitive bid approved by us; or
3. an estimate written based upon the prevailing competitive price ... [which] means prices charged by a *495 majority of the repair market in the area whеre the ear is to be repaired ...
Additionally, the State Farm policy explicitly reserves the insurer’s right to indemnify the insured “for the loss in money or may repair or replace the automobile or suсh part thereof, as aforesaid.”
Beyond the difference in the degree of specificity, we note the Campbell court failed to apply traditional principles of contract interpretаtion in construing the insurance contract.
The cardinal rule of contract interpretation is to ascertain and give legal effect to the parties’ intentions as determined by the contract language.
United Dominion Realty Trust, Inc. v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.,
If the contract’s language is clear and unambiguous, the language alone determines the contract’s force and effect.
See United Dominion, supra.
When a cоntract is unambiguous a court must construe its provisions according to the terms the parties used; understood in their plain, ordinary, and popular sense.
C.A.N. Enter., Inc. v. South Carolina Health and Human Servs. Fin. Comm’n,
An insurance contract is read as a whole document so that “one may not, by pointing out a single sentence or clause, create an ambiguity.”
Yarborough v. Phoenix Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
Rather than applying these principles,
Campbell
quoted a Texas case
1
to define “repair” and “replace” to mean “the
*496
restoration of the automobile to substantially the same condition in which it was immediately prior to the collision”, while noting “it would not be restored to the condition if the repair left the market value of the automobile substantially less than the value immediately before the collision.”
Campbell,
Schulmeyer seeks to recover for diminution of his vehicle’s value. The question is: under the insurance contract “must the insurer pay for dаmage which is not repairable but which nonetheless results in a diminution in value of the insured automobile?”
See Carlton,
There is split authority over whether a plaintiff should be allowed to recover diminished value beyond the cost of repairs, with the recent trend disfavoring the claim. 3
*497
The minority view espoused most recently by the Georgia Supreme Court in
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Mabry,
No similar public policy applies to insurance сontracts in this state. Rather this Court is required to give effect to the plain meaning of the words in an unambiguous contract. See United Dominion, supra.
The majority of states to recently address the issue deny recovery for diminution in valuе. These courts rest their decisions on the rationale the terms “repair” and “replace” are not ambiguous when viewed in light of the entire contract. See, e.g., Siegle, supra. As such they apply, as we must, the commonly used definition of those words to limit any such recovery.
Generally, “repair” means “[t]o mend, remedy, restore, renovate ... [t]o restore to a sound or good state after decay, injury, dilapidation, оr partial destruction.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1298 (6th ed.1990); see also Webster’s II New College Dictionary 939 (1995) (“repair” means “[t]o restore to sound condition after damage or injury ...”); Merrianu-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary 991 (10th ed.1999) (“repair” means “to restore by replacing a part or putting together what is tom or broken”).
*498
In the context of an insurance contract the word “replace” means the insurer will “restore [the insured’s vehicle] to a former place or position,” or “take the place of ... as a substitute or successor.”
See Siegle v. Progressive Consumers Insurance Co.,
There is no concept of value in the ordinary meaning of these words.
See Carlton, supra; Markel,
The State Farm policy sub judice does not recognize value as inherent in the concept “repair or replacement.” The policy recognizes the cost of repair or replacement may be determined by a rate agreed between insurer and insured; a competitive bid approved by the insurer; or an estimate based upon the prevailing competitive market price. The policy, read as a whole, defines repair or replacement as restoring the vehicle to pre-accidеnt mechanical function and condition and not as restoring value.
To read value into the repair clause would arbitrarily read out of the policy the insurer’s right to determine whether to repair the vehicle or to pay for its loss.
Bickel,
Certified Question Answered.
Notes
.
American Stand. Cnty. Mut. Ins. Co. v. Barbee, 262
S.W.2d 122, 123 (Tex.Civ.App.1953),
disapproved of on other grounds by Luna v. North Star Dodge Sales, Inc.,
. Likewise, Lumpkin is not binding as precedent. In Lumpkin, this Court applied the Campbell rule in dicta within a case concerning the tort of conversion. The Lumpkin Court decision did not involve the interpretation of the language of an insurance contract.
.
See, e.g., Driscoll
v.
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 227
F.Supp.2d 696 (E.D.Mich.2002);
Pritchett v. State Farm,
. Because of our answer to the first certified question, we do not address the second question.
